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Posts Tagged ‘Gordon Ramsay’

Inn With A Chance

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

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Clerkenwell has slowly but surely established itself as one of London’s most exciting dining destinations, with restaurants of the calibre of St John, The Modern Pantry and Moro drawing in the discerning crowds of gourmands, who seem attracted by the combination of the hip locale and quality of the top chefs in the area, including Fergus Henderson, Anna Hansen and, now, Bjorn van der Horst.

Bjorn, who runs the Eastside Inn with his wife Justine, is a former chef of Mayfair’s Greenhouse restaurant, as well as chef-patron of the Michelin-starred La Noisette, which was part of the Gordon Ramsay empire. Setting up on his own in Clerkenwell, the van der Horsts opened a restaurant which is half fine dining emporium, half French bistro.

The fine dining side of the operation is heavily based around local market produce, and allowing diners a degree of leeway in how their food is cooked, whereas the bistro is a more traditional operation. The set-piece dish here is a cote de boeuf that is shared between two people, which allows classically excellent cooking to dominate over a superb piece of beautifully prepared meat, served up with delicious bearnaise sauce and delicately spiced chips. But then everything on the menu is intelligently prepared and served, whether it’s an hors d’oeuvre of duck rillette, crab cakes with paprika mayonnaise or a wickedly decadent Grand Marnier souffle as a dessert. All this is accompanied by a well-chosen and comprehensive wine list, offering everything from good, carefully selected wines by the glass to some flamboyant vintages at the higher end of the list.

It’s too early to say whether Michelin will choose to recognise Bjorn’s cooking in the same way that it did at La Noisette or The Greenhouse, but there can be no doubt, from a visit to the bistro, that it is doing an excellent job at presenting a clear, unpretentious menu well, but with real flair and passion in its execution. It’s hard to think what else you could wish for somewhere like this.

40 St John St, London EC1 www.esilondon.com

The (Park) Place To Be

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

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William Drabble is one of London’s most talented and able chefs, but perhaps because he’s not as much of a publicity magnet as your Ramsays or Wareings, his move from the Michelin-starred Aubergine (where, coincidentally, Ramsay began his career) to Seven Park Place, the new fine dining restaurant at the seriously swanky St James Hotel didn’t get as much fanfare as you might have expected. This almost self-effacing quality extends to the restaurant itself. Rather than a big, lavish dining room, the atmosphere is hushed and intimate, with only a couple of dozen covers in some small rooms adjoining the bar.

What this lacks in grandeur and pomp it more than makes up with in fireworks from the kitchen. Drabble’s cooking is not dissimilar to what he was doing at Aubergine, in terms of his synthesis of European and English influences, but by and large he eschews the usual Michelin fripperies of foams and reductions in favour of gutsier, heartier cooking. The six-course ‘menu gourmand’ – on our visit thankfully free of amuse bouches and pre-desserts – covers a remarkable amount of ground, with highlights including a sensational foie gras dish with butter beans and bacon, pan-fried sea bass with Jerusalem artichokes and a witty deconstruction of the pina colada at the end.

It’s a good idea to have this with the suggested matching wines, as this allows you to try some sensational pairings, such as the Grenache Sauvignon with a starter of scallop ceviche and a rich, gutsy German Pinot Noir with the sea bass, as well as a sensational Riesling with the foie gras. Service throughout is attentive, perhaps even too much so, but with an experience of this quality it’s always nice to feel looked after in the style that the food deserves.

7 Park Place, London SW1. www.stjamesclubandhotel.co.uk

A True Sicilian Promise

Monday, January 25th, 2010

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Other than Gordon Ramsay and Angela Hartnett’s superb York & Albany and Ian Pengelley’s Gilgamesh, Camden is starved of really excellent places to dine, perhaps a side-effect of being a part of North London more keenly associated with trendy musicians and hip artists than culinary innovation. Three cheers, then, for the excellent Caponata, a superb neighbourhood Italian restaurant that sits on the site of the late, lamented Cafe Delancey, but offers an altogether different culinary experience.

You have a choice of either eating in the informal osteria and bar on the ground floor, which offers delicious and informal snacks and aperitivo bites, or upstairs in the more grown-up dining room, where the cuisine is Sicilian, the service slick and friendly, and the clientele relieved that they have found somewhere as good as this in Camden.

Start with seared scallops with Cavolo Nero or superbly decadent pan-fried quail’s breast with foie gras, and follow it with fettucine and hare ragout or seriously impressive rack of lamb. Whatever you choose, you’re sure to be delighted. The wine list offers a range of unusual and sensibly priced options, including a pleasing amount by the glass, and make sure that you have one of the fine Bellinis to start off what will undoubtedly be a superb meal.

3-7 Delancey St, Camden, NW1 www.caponatacamden.co.uk

Fin de siecle

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

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It occurred to me the other morning that not only are we heading to the end of another year but also the end of the decade. The “noughties” for me seem to have passed pretty damn quickly and it seems to me rather like the next decade is going to go just as quick. The end of this decade also signifies a 10 year milestone of my work on the restaurant scene, including nearly eight years at Quintessentially.

Looking back over the decade, the restaurant scene has evolved in a fascinating way. When I started, Jamie Oliver was a little known trainee, and Gordon Ramsay, the ex-head chef of Aubergine, was just beginning to make waves on the restaurant scene. Fast forward ten years and Jamie Oliver has become a huge success and gathered a reputation as a crusader for food education. His series Jamie’s School Dinners caught the attention of the Government and creating a huge amount of publicity at the time.

And Gordon Ramsay is, well, Gordon Ramsay. Although his star has slightly faded in the past year, there’s no doubt that he remains a highly astute businessman, a genuinely iconic public figure and a hugely talented chef. Expect 2010 to see a resurgence. We should also expect to see his one-time protege Marcus Wareing, another incredibly able chef, become as much of a household name as his mentor; his restaurant at The Berkeley is often described as the best in London, most notably by Harden’s Guide.

We’ve also seen Marco Pierre White reduce his empire quite drastically, along with John Burton Race. Pierre Koffman also retired, taking La Tante Claire along with his delicious signature dish of pig’s trotters and morel mushrooms with him, although he has returned briefly for his hugely successful pop up at Selfridges. Reassuringly, the current rumours are that that he will return to the scene very soon.

We’ve seen the rise of the Asian food scene with Alan Yau’s huge successes with Hakkasan and Yauatcha, Zuma and Nobu have rocked the scene for fine Japanese cuisine and A-list hang outs, and more recently the huge success of Nobu Berkeley, a mere 500 yards from its older sister, has proved that a winning idea can be replicated without over-saturation. With the arrival next year of Heston Blumenthal at the Mandarin Oriental alongside Daniel Boulud, the London restaurant scene looks only to be getting even better – so all I can say is “roll on 2010!”

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